Stanford researchers have created a basic system that shuns silicon in
favor of imperfect lines of carbon atoms that could one day deliver even
more performance and efficiency than current technology.
Silicon Valley may soon require a name change to avoid the risk of
sounding like a relic from a generation of bygone tech, thanks to new
computer system created -- where else -- in Silicon Valley.
A cover story for the journal Nature,
out Wednesday, details the efforts of a team based at Stanford to
create the first basic computer built around carbon nanotubes rather
than silicon chips.
"People have been talking about a new era of carbon nanotube
electronics moving beyond silicon," Stanford professor Subhasish Mitra
said in a release
from the university. "But there have been few demonstrations of
complete digital systems using this exciting technology. Here is the
proof."
If you're the type of user who's much more concerned with what your
computer or device can do rather than how it does it or what type of
semiconductor material inside is making the magic happen, here's the
skinny on why you should pay attention to the nerdy details at least
this once
For decades now, the exponential acceleration of technology -- which
has taken us from room-size computers run by punched paper cards to
insanely more powerful devices in our pockets -- has depended on
shrinking silicon transistors to jam ever more onto a chip.
The
result of this miniaturizing march has been devices that are becoming
ever smaller, more powerful, and cheaper. In fact, transistor density
has doubled pretty reliably about every 18 months or so since the dawn
of the information age -- you might know this as "Moore's Law."
But many think silicon's long run as the king of computing could be nearing an end.
That's because continually jamming more tiny transistors on a chip has
become more difficult, expensive, and inefficient, not to mention the
inevitable physical limitations -- you can't keep shrinking transistors
forever.
Carbon nanotubes -- long chains of carbon atoms thousands of times
thinner than a human hair -- have the potential to be more
energy-efficient and "take us at least an order of magnitude in
performance beyond where you can project silicon could take us,"
according to H.S. Philip Wong, another member of the Stanford team.
Problem is, carbon nanotubes aren't perfect either. They don't
always grow in perfectly straight lines, and a fraction of the tubes
grown aren't able to "switch off" like a regular transistor.
The
Stanford team used a technique of "burning" off some of the imperfect
carbon nanotubes while also working their way around other imperfections
by using a complex algorithm. The final design consists of a very basic
computer with 178 transistors that can do tasks like counting and
number sorting and switch between functions.
The computer's limited power is due in part to the facilities
available to the team, which did not have access to industrial
fabrication tools.
So what we have now is basically a proof of concept for the first
carbon nanotube computer, which is about as powerful as Intel's 4004,
the first single-chip silicon microprocessor released in 1971. But if
this technology turns out to be a worthy successor, we'll likely see
devices that can not only compete with, but greatly exceed, the
potential of silicon systems.
More importantly, it could mean that Moore's Law will continue for at least a little while longer.
Today, a carbon nanotube computer that can count its own transistors;
tomorrow, perhaps the power of a human brain captured in strands
thinner than a human hair.
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